H
HesyCath
Guest
Here you are equivocating between substance and essence. In the west there has been a tendency to equivocate essence and substance. As I showed before, the distinction between essence and energy in God is a distinction in terms of relationship between God and his creation. Composition always requires separate substances, and Palamists do not believe God to be composed of multiple substances.The divine energies are not the divine essence and a separated from the essence in that they do not contain the divine essence. This is the difference and why it means there must be composition. This separation of energy from essence was necessary for Palamas to avoid a creature becoming God. However in emphasising such a real distinction, it created composition in God as it means God exists in :
- His essence and
- His energies/attributes/operations (which is problematic also because God can’t exist outside of His essence otherwise that isn’t God that you’re encountering but something else)
Nature and essence are not the same term philosophically. Also, his point here is that God exists as one being. His quote is based on the assumption that the essence-energies distinction implies composition, which as I have showed above, it does not.Cyril : “ For if one is not too poorly endowed with the decency which befits wise men, ** one will say that the divine being is properly and primarily simple and incomposite; one will not, dear friend, venture to think that it is composed out of nature and energy, as though, in the case of the divine, these are naturally other ; one will believe that it exists as entirely one thing with all that it substantially possesses